In regards to Parry, strong points can be made against him, but also exonerating him.
Guilt:
1) False alibi for the night of the call. THIS in my opinion is THE strongest evidence to suggest he had called. Without the false alibi I would definitely not think he called. There would be nothing of the sort to suggest it.
2) The possibility he could have made the call based on the testimony of Lily Lloyd (of note: her mother claimed he called at 7.15, which WOULD exonerate him).
3) His parents had attempted to have him shipped out of the country, rather calling into question whether his Brine alibi is true or coerced.
Innocence:
1) Parry, to me, seems to be a standard hoodlum, but neither a violent man, nor someone who would betray friends. Wallace had said that Parry was a "family friend" to himself and Julia. In fact, Parry had given Wallace the gift of a calendar just a few weeks earlier in December.
2) The fact the equivalent of the "cash box" was ALSO the only thing stolen from at the scene of #19, helps draw suspicion away from Parry. Obviously someone had inside knowledge to know where the #19 "cash box" was, and that person was NOT Parry.
Ambiguous:
1) I often find it hard to believe people are completely lying - but the testimony Parkes gave is rather crazy, and it leads me to wonder whether there was some tiny grain of truth (e.g. that Parry came and got his car hosed down) that he then greatly exaggerated with extra details. For example - the idea that as soon as Parkes saw the glove he admitted he'd be hung for it, and then randomly VOLUNTEERED where he'd dropped the murder weapon? How farfetched.
I mean we see that the inside of the car was totally clean, so a wringing wet blood-soaked passenger having got in seems unlikely. So then you have to imagine, all he was given was the weapon and glove.
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Overall, in regards to Parry, I could see him breaking into random people's cars etc. but I do not see him as being a very violent man (I mean he was essentially harassed by Goodman and others, and not once acted out against them in violence AFAIK, even though even I would probably have thrown something at them if they'd been stalking me and harassing me continuously)... He was found totally innocent of the sexual assault charges against him, by the way, which, ironically, was investigated by professor MacFall.
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My points following about Wallace were mainly to raise the idea that maybe he WAS a bit of a "bumbling" old man:
1. Yes 16 years without promotion could lead a man to feel unappreciated... But it could also just be that he was simply not good enough to be promoted.
2. Gannon's proposition was laughable in my opinion. He said it was an anagram for "SLAY J 1889" AKA 7.29 PM... Lol... But really, he was referring to a book by John Kirkwood Leys. He fumbled both the name of the author, AND the date, thus raising the possibility that maybe he IS prone to lapses of memory, or fumbling details.
As I said though, it could be that he purposefully added these things into the diary to allay suspicion away from himself. E.g. that detectives would read that and come to the conclusion that he is this prone to mistakes and messing up fine details/names etc.
3a. Yes. The point ALONE would point to his guilt strongly. But that's because we are viewing him as a highly intelligent chess champion. If, for example, he had an IQ of 70 and was considered to be the "village idiot", we wouldn't be shocked at him getting so many things wrong.
Potentially you could also argue that due to the stress of losing his wife, he had fumbled on the details... But I don't necessarily believe that is plausible.
3b. He mentioned the dog whip BEFORE Draper had come and identified the bar and poker as being missing. It is a very unusual item to own for people without a dog lol. And would fit in with the rumors about Amy Wallace. Particularly that William indulged in similar fantasies to her.
3c. Well the members of the club said he was specifically known for being a bad player:
And of course he also sucked a the violin. Lol...
The most damning evidence against him, all the fumbled statements, retractions, false information, could be explained by a man who suffered from some type of memory issue or lacking intelligence (even self-professed intellectuals aren't always exactly intellectual lmao. Anyone can read Marcus Aurelius etc. but it doesn't mean they're smart). If others like Rod and Antony were still posting here, I think they would have deeper information, having seen the police files.
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Obviously I find Wallace to be a suspicious man, but my main gripes about him would be allayed if he had some type of memory issue, or was not exactly as intelligent as we are led to believe. And also I DO question the lack of blood, when I think about it... He would have had to wear clothes, the mack, and the hat. Probably gloves too... And socks... Because from what I read from the forensic team at the time, even if he had bathed, it would not remove all traces of blood. So if traces were still on him, then whatever new outfit he put on would have got microscopic bloodstains on which would have been revealed by the benzidine test which was performed upon them.
Am I wrong in this?
If I'm not wrong, I would think he either totally incinerated ALL of these items in the kitchen fire. Or handed them off to someone else (if he had acted alone in committing the act).
Also obviously the timing is a slight issue.
If anyone is going to focus on points about Parry and Wallace - I think it'd be worth investigating things which I DON'T think have been strongly debated or questioned before: WHY was he first seen at Smithdown Lane (the second tram he claimed to have boarded, was it not?), WHY did nobody see him on his tram journey home? Did he have some OTHER means of getting to Smithdown Lane and from Menlove Gardens which would shave off time?
And Lily Hall's statement, importantly focus on the clothing she reported him as wearing. I may have been wrong because I first of all said she'd correctly identified his outfit. But now I see he claimed he had worn a "fawn" overcoat, which is a light brown color. Did anyone else see him wearing a dark overcoat - the Johnstons - the constable? Surely someone else had described his outfit... The doppelganger seen on the cab ride was wearing a dark overcoat though not a hat.
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Since learning a lot of new information I don't anymore think that we should just be arguing about whether it was Wallace alone, Parry alone, Parry and Marsden, Wallace Parry and Marsden, or Parry and "Unknown"... At least not now.
I think new avenues have been opened up which deserve to be explored.
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Anyone with access to information of that time period, should right now be searching hard for information on ALL the Anfield burglaries (I cannot find them mentioned before the Wallace case came to light, which is annoying). We know a skeleton key was used - ok, but what about the crime scenes themselves? How similar were they to the others? Did the scenes tend to suggest advanced knowledge of the home's layout and where the most valuable possessions were located?
Did Sarah Draper or any other cleaning lady/staff members work at the #19 home or any others which were burgled. Was O'Mara really a random lunatic, or can he be connected in any way to the burglaries? He had committed suicide after setting his baby on fire only 30 minutes from Wolverton Street on the same night at 10 PM - brandishing an iron bar with which to threaten people... He had been out of work for 5 years, so had he been supporting himself through burglary? Had he, having commited murder, decided to commit suicide once realizing what he had done? It's a long shot... But definitely new information about events surrounding that night which I don't think have ever been mentioned before.
Can we PROVE Joseph Wallace arrived in Liverpool after the murder? Could he have been the one on that cab ride, disposing items in the lake at Princes Park, before making the very short trip to Amy's home (or the rented one, as I don't see evidence of the date he rented it out)?
We know the Johnstons had been in #19, and also had been asked to open and close curtains in #29, rather calling into question the claim that they'd only been in the parlor. The residents of #19 had also asked the Johnstons to keep watch of their home while they were away.
Did you know Mr. Johnston had to rise for work at 4 AM? What was he doing going to visit Phyllis at a time where he would likely have turned up at 9 PM or even a bit later?
Did you also know Mr. Johnston had a colleague from the shipyard where he worked who lived at 30 Menlove Gardens West, who he stopped visiting following the murder?
The Johnstons had also looked after Julia's cat. The same cat that went missing 24 hours before the crime was committed (strongly suggesting the cat was kept somewhere overnight, given the weather conditions).
The Johnstons were also direct neighbors to the Wallaces, and had they committed this act, it would be obvious how they could just "disappear", since they had only to walk a couple of feet from the back yard door into their own.
I DO think all residents within the red boxed area I showed (odd numbered Wolverton, and the Richmond Park side) should be heavily considered, either as the killers themselves, or accomplices. And even if the Johnstons were involved in some way, then there is no definite proof that it was something they did alone either. Back in those times, most "housebreakers" were syndicates working together, like the Allerton bunch who were caught in December 1930. The last home having been hit in Menlove Gardens, ironically, and a huge £243 bounty stolen.
And of course, obviously, Wallace could have given them the cat and blackmailed Johnston (who he figured out behind burglaries in the area) into committing murder.
---
I think this is the information we should be exploring at the moment, as I don't believe it has really been discussed in detail before? But then again, I've only been here a few months and the posters here have had decades of discussion! So who knows?!
Guilt:
1) False alibi for the night of the call. THIS in my opinion is THE strongest evidence to suggest he had called. Without the false alibi I would definitely not think he called. There would be nothing of the sort to suggest it.
2) The possibility he could have made the call based on the testimony of Lily Lloyd (of note: her mother claimed he called at 7.15, which WOULD exonerate him).
3) His parents had attempted to have him shipped out of the country, rather calling into question whether his Brine alibi is true or coerced.
Innocence:
1) Parry, to me, seems to be a standard hoodlum, but neither a violent man, nor someone who would betray friends. Wallace had said that Parry was a "family friend" to himself and Julia. In fact, Parry had given Wallace the gift of a calendar just a few weeks earlier in December.
2) The fact the equivalent of the "cash box" was ALSO the only thing stolen from at the scene of #19, helps draw suspicion away from Parry. Obviously someone had inside knowledge to know where the #19 "cash box" was, and that person was NOT Parry.
Ambiguous:
1) I often find it hard to believe people are completely lying - but the testimony Parkes gave is rather crazy, and it leads me to wonder whether there was some tiny grain of truth (e.g. that Parry came and got his car hosed down) that he then greatly exaggerated with extra details. For example - the idea that as soon as Parkes saw the glove he admitted he'd be hung for it, and then randomly VOLUNTEERED where he'd dropped the murder weapon? How farfetched.
I mean we see that the inside of the car was totally clean, so a wringing wet blood-soaked passenger having got in seems unlikely. So then you have to imagine, all he was given was the weapon and glove.
---
Overall, in regards to Parry, I could see him breaking into random people's cars etc. but I do not see him as being a very violent man (I mean he was essentially harassed by Goodman and others, and not once acted out against them in violence AFAIK, even though even I would probably have thrown something at them if they'd been stalking me and harassing me continuously)... He was found totally innocent of the sexual assault charges against him, by the way, which, ironically, was investigated by professor MacFall.
---
My points following about Wallace were mainly to raise the idea that maybe he WAS a bit of a "bumbling" old man:
1. Yes 16 years without promotion could lead a man to feel unappreciated... But it could also just be that he was simply not good enough to be promoted.
2. Gannon's proposition was laughable in my opinion. He said it was an anagram for "SLAY J 1889" AKA 7.29 PM... Lol... But really, he was referring to a book by John Kirkwood Leys. He fumbled both the name of the author, AND the date, thus raising the possibility that maybe he IS prone to lapses of memory, or fumbling details.
As I said though, it could be that he purposefully added these things into the diary to allay suspicion away from himself. E.g. that detectives would read that and come to the conclusion that he is this prone to mistakes and messing up fine details/names etc.
3a. Yes. The point ALONE would point to his guilt strongly. But that's because we are viewing him as a highly intelligent chess champion. If, for example, he had an IQ of 70 and was considered to be the "village idiot", we wouldn't be shocked at him getting so many things wrong.
Potentially you could also argue that due to the stress of losing his wife, he had fumbled on the details... But I don't necessarily believe that is plausible.
3b. He mentioned the dog whip BEFORE Draper had come and identified the bar and poker as being missing. It is a very unusual item to own for people without a dog lol. And would fit in with the rumors about Amy Wallace. Particularly that William indulged in similar fantasies to her.
3c. Well the members of the club said he was specifically known for being a bad player:
At the time of the case a member of the Central Chess Club called Wallace a “chess-vandalist”, adding that “the best one can say about him is that he is an enthusiastic duffer”. Another member—a true devotee, this one—remarked, “The murder of his wife apart, I think Wallace ought to be hanged for being such a bad chess-player.”
The most damning evidence against him, all the fumbled statements, retractions, false information, could be explained by a man who suffered from some type of memory issue or lacking intelligence (even self-professed intellectuals aren't always exactly intellectual lmao. Anyone can read Marcus Aurelius etc. but it doesn't mean they're smart). If others like Rod and Antony were still posting here, I think they would have deeper information, having seen the police files.
---
Obviously I find Wallace to be a suspicious man, but my main gripes about him would be allayed if he had some type of memory issue, or was not exactly as intelligent as we are led to believe. And also I DO question the lack of blood, when I think about it... He would have had to wear clothes, the mack, and the hat. Probably gloves too... And socks... Because from what I read from the forensic team at the time, even if he had bathed, it would not remove all traces of blood. So if traces were still on him, then whatever new outfit he put on would have got microscopic bloodstains on which would have been revealed by the benzidine test which was performed upon them.
Am I wrong in this?
If I'm not wrong, I would think he either totally incinerated ALL of these items in the kitchen fire. Or handed them off to someone else (if he had acted alone in committing the act).
Also obviously the timing is a slight issue.
If anyone is going to focus on points about Parry and Wallace - I think it'd be worth investigating things which I DON'T think have been strongly debated or questioned before: WHY was he first seen at Smithdown Lane (the second tram he claimed to have boarded, was it not?), WHY did nobody see him on his tram journey home? Did he have some OTHER means of getting to Smithdown Lane and from Menlove Gardens which would shave off time?
And Lily Hall's statement, importantly focus on the clothing she reported him as wearing. I may have been wrong because I first of all said she'd correctly identified his outfit. But now I see he claimed he had worn a "fawn" overcoat, which is a light brown color. Did anyone else see him wearing a dark overcoat - the Johnstons - the constable? Surely someone else had described his outfit... The doppelganger seen on the cab ride was wearing a dark overcoat though not a hat.
---
Since learning a lot of new information I don't anymore think that we should just be arguing about whether it was Wallace alone, Parry alone, Parry and Marsden, Wallace Parry and Marsden, or Parry and "Unknown"... At least not now.
I think new avenues have been opened up which deserve to be explored.
---
Anyone with access to information of that time period, should right now be searching hard for information on ALL the Anfield burglaries (I cannot find them mentioned before the Wallace case came to light, which is annoying). We know a skeleton key was used - ok, but what about the crime scenes themselves? How similar were they to the others? Did the scenes tend to suggest advanced knowledge of the home's layout and where the most valuable possessions were located?
Did Sarah Draper or any other cleaning lady/staff members work at the #19 home or any others which were burgled. Was O'Mara really a random lunatic, or can he be connected in any way to the burglaries? He had committed suicide after setting his baby on fire only 30 minutes from Wolverton Street on the same night at 10 PM - brandishing an iron bar with which to threaten people... He had been out of work for 5 years, so had he been supporting himself through burglary? Had he, having commited murder, decided to commit suicide once realizing what he had done? It's a long shot... But definitely new information about events surrounding that night which I don't think have ever been mentioned before.
Can we PROVE Joseph Wallace arrived in Liverpool after the murder? Could he have been the one on that cab ride, disposing items in the lake at Princes Park, before making the very short trip to Amy's home (or the rented one, as I don't see evidence of the date he rented it out)?
We know the Johnstons had been in #19, and also had been asked to open and close curtains in #29, rather calling into question the claim that they'd only been in the parlor. The residents of #19 had also asked the Johnstons to keep watch of their home while they were away.
Did you know Mr. Johnston had to rise for work at 4 AM? What was he doing going to visit Phyllis at a time where he would likely have turned up at 9 PM or even a bit later?
Did you also know Mr. Johnston had a colleague from the shipyard where he worked who lived at 30 Menlove Gardens West, who he stopped visiting following the murder?
The Johnstons had also looked after Julia's cat. The same cat that went missing 24 hours before the crime was committed (strongly suggesting the cat was kept somewhere overnight, given the weather conditions).
The Johnstons were also direct neighbors to the Wallaces, and had they committed this act, it would be obvious how they could just "disappear", since they had only to walk a couple of feet from the back yard door into their own.
I DO think all residents within the red boxed area I showed (odd numbered Wolverton, and the Richmond Park side) should be heavily considered, either as the killers themselves, or accomplices. And even if the Johnstons were involved in some way, then there is no definite proof that it was something they did alone either. Back in those times, most "housebreakers" were syndicates working together, like the Allerton bunch who were caught in December 1930. The last home having been hit in Menlove Gardens, ironically, and a huge £243 bounty stolen.
And of course, obviously, Wallace could have given them the cat and blackmailed Johnston (who he figured out behind burglaries in the area) into committing murder.
---
I think this is the information we should be exploring at the moment, as I don't believe it has really been discussed in detail before? But then again, I've only been here a few months and the posters here have had decades of discussion! So who knows?!
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